Assessing the Values of Heritage in Sv System

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Assessing the Values of Heritage in Sv System IWEK S . A AREK, M ASSESSING THE VALUES OF HERITAGE IN SV SYSTEM: . FORTUNA- A the Method and Examples of Use ZMYGIN, S B. SE U F ES O ES L XAMP E ETHOD AND AND ETHOD M YSTEM: THE THE YSTEM: S V V S ERITAGE IN IN ERITAGE H F UES O UES L ISBN 978-83-7947-290-1 BOGUSŁAW SZMYGIN, ANNA FORTUNA-MAREK, ANDRZEJ SIWEK SSESSING THE VA THE SSESSING A Lublin University of Technology Lublin 2018 ISBN 978-83-7947-290-1 ACADEMIC REVIEWERS: Marcin Gawlicki, Professor of Architecture Robert Hirsch, Professor of Architecture EDITOR: Katarzyna Choroś TRANSLATION: Arkadiusz Mikrut Agata Osińska GRAPHIC DESIGN: Aleksandra Laskowska PUBLISHER: Lublin University of Technology Nadbystrzycka 38D, 20-618 Lublin PRINTED BY: Drukarnia Alf-Graf Abramowicka 6, 20-442 Lublin This monograph has been published as part of the project entitled: Smart Values – Scientific modern analysis of research topic; Values and valuation as the key factors in the protection, conservation and future modern utilization of the heritage – collaborative research of European cultural heritage. The project is co-financed by National Science Centre; Grant no.: DEC-2013/11/Z/HS2/00001 (UMO-2013/10/Z/HS2/00804) Special thanks to: Barbara Olejarz – Head of Ignacy Łukasiewicz Museum of Oil and Gas Industry in Bóbrka Maria Badeńska-Stapp – Municipal Historic Preservation Officer in Żyrardów Maciej Szymczyk, Ph.D. – Head of the Museum of Papermaking in Duszniki-Zdrój Bogusław szmygin, anna Fortuna-marek, andrzej siwek Lublin university of technology Politechnika Lubelska Lublin 2018 Lublin 2017 TABLE OF CONTENTS TABLE OF CONTENTS DETerminanTS, ASSUMPTIONS, HERITage valUE ASSESSMENT WITH SMART VALUE METHODOLOGY.......................................................................................................... 9 ANALYSIS OF THE VALUE OF THE CRUDE OIL MINE IN BÓBRKA ........................................... 23 DESCRIPTION OF THE ASSET ......................................................................................................................... 25 1.1. Historical characteristics of the asset .................................................................................................. 25 1.1.1. Historical context of crude oil extraction ................................................................................. 25 1.1.2. An outline of the history of the mine and the open-air museum ............................................ 28 1.1.3. Ignacy Łukasiewicz – the man and his role in the development of the Galician oil industry ... 39 1.2. Formal description of the asset .......................................................................................................... 41 1.2.1. The characteristics of the geographic and geological location .................................................. 41 1.2.2. Brief description of the mine ................................................................................................... 43 1.3. Brief description of the condition of the asset .................................................................................... 47 1.3.1 State of preservation of the historical substance ...................................................................... 47 1.3.2 Technical condition .................................................................................................................. 47 LeveL 1. ........................................................................................................................................................... 49 I. Description and analysis of the asset aiming at choosing characteristics, for which the reference group is to be selected ................................................................................... 49 I.1. Spatial scale ................................................................................................................................. 49 I.2. The scale of the mine’s facilities and equipment, i.e. the scale of architectural and technical infrastructure ..................................................................................................... 52 I.3. The asset’s function ...................................................................................................................... 66 I.4. Identified values of the asset....................................................................................................... 67 I.5. Specification of the asset’s type and indication of the reference group representing a comparative context .......................................................................................... 68 I.6. Determination of the criteria for evaluation and assessment of the asset in the light of the selected criteria in relation to the reference group ...................................... 69 LeveL 2. ........................................................................................................................................................... 75 I. Analysis of the asset’s value – determination of the attributes of the asset and assessment of their authenticity and integrity .............................................................................. 75 II. Formulation of preliminary conservation guidelines for the protection of the asset ............................... 83 List of Figures .................................................................................................................................................. 87 References (selection) .................................................................................................................................... 91 Assessing the Values of Heritage in SV System: the Method and Examples of Use ANALYSIS OF THE VALUE OF THE PAPER MILL PREMISES IN DUSZNIKI ZDRÓJ ................ 93 FORMAL DESCRIPTION OF THE PROPERTY .................................................................................................. 95 1.1 Historical analysis of the property ...................................................................................................... 95 1.1.1 Historical context of paper production ..................................................................................... 95 1.1.2 The history of the paper mill and development of Duszniki .................................................... 97 1.2 Formal description of the property ..................................................................................................... 102 1.2.1 Location ................................................................................................................................... 102 1.2.2 Short description of the paper mill premises ........................................................................... 102 1.3. Short description of the current condition of the property .................................................................. 104 LEVEL 1 ............................................................................................................................................................ 107 I. Description and analysis of the property aimed at selecting reference group attributes. .................... 107 I.1. Location and the surrounding area .............................................................................................. 107 I.2. Composition layout of the paper mill premises ............................................................................. 107 I.3. Buildings of distinctive external form ........................................................................................... 110 I.4. Internal historical form of the structures ...................................................................................... 116 I.5. Decorations inside the paper mill ................................................................................................ 119 I.6. Materials, substances and the structure ....................................................................................... 121 I.7. Paper mill equipment - original elements being preserved and additional museum exhibits ....... 123 I.8. Function of the facilities .............................................................................................................. 125 II. Defining the type of the property and selecting comparative group ....................................................... 128 III. Valuing criteria and value assessment of the property, based on the reference group ........................... 130 LEVEL 2 ............................................................................................................................................................ 137 I. Analysing the values of the paper mill – defining value attributes as well as assessing their authenticity and integrity ................................... 137 II. Preliminary conclusions and recommendations concerning protection of the subject facility ............. 145 List of Figures .................................................................................................................................................. 151 References (selection) .................................................................................................................................... 155 ŻYRARDÓW THE 19TH-CENTURY FACTORY SETTLEMENT ANALYSIS OF THE VALUES .......................................................................................... 157 1. CHARACTeRISTICS OF THe ASSeT ............................................................................................................ 159 1.1. Historical
Recommended publications
  • Download (7MB)
    British Technologies and Polish Economic Development 1815-1863 Simon Niziol Thesis submitted for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy London School of Economics and Political Science University of London December 1995 UMI Number: U084454 All rights reserved INFORMATION TO ALL USERS The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. In the unlikely event that the author did not send a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. Dissertation Publishing UMI U084454 Published by ProQuest LLC 2014. Copyright in the Dissertation held by the Author. Microform Edition © ProQuest LLC. All rights reserved. This work is protected against unauthorized copying under Title 17, United States Code. ProQuest LLC 789 East Eisenhower Parkway P.O. Box 1346 Ann Arbor, Ml 48106-1346 "Theses . F 9555 . 12586 2-5 Abstract After the restoration of peace in 1815, several European countries sought to transform their economies by the direct borrowing of British technologies. One of these was the semi- autonomous Kingdom of Poland. The Kingdom's technology transfer initiatives have been largely ignored by foreign researchers, while Polish historians have failed to place developments in the Kingdom within a wider context of European followership. The varying fortunes of Polish transfer initiatives offer valuable insights into the mechanisms and constraints of the transfer process. A close study of attempts to introduce British technologies in mechanical engineering, metallurgy, railway construction, textile production and agriculture contradicts most Polish scholarship by establishing that most of the transfer initiatives were either misplaced or at least premature.
    [Show full text]
  • 1 AMBROSINO, T. Processus Informativus, Sive De Formandi Processum Informativum Brevis Tractatus, ...In Quo Quam Multa Ad
    1 AMBROSINO, T. Processus Informativus, sive de formandi Processum Informativum brevis Tractatus, ..... In quo quam multa ad Theoricam et praxim Criminalium Iudiciorum, Quamque necessaria ijs, qui rectè, & laudabiliter latrunculatoris nus obire cupiunt contineantur, Elenchus infra appositus breviter, dilucideq; demonstrabit ..... Mediolani, Ex Officina Typogr. quon Pacifici Pontii, 1600. (16), 240, (44) pp. 8vo. Contemporary wrinkled overlapping vellum, small damage at foot of front cover, handwritten name and title to spine. € 900 Not in Adams; not in BMSTC (Italian); not in Camus; Vinciana 1232 (1667 edition, the entry gives as earliest edition 1605). Second edition, first published in 1597 (?) Interesting work detailing criminal procedure: capture of suspects, investigation of proof, interrogations, etc. etc. An important part of the work is devoted to the practise of torture and its various modalities. Old handwritten ownership’s entry in blank portion of title-page, F6 with a small hole not affecting text, pagenumbering quire G mixed up, but complete. 2 AVENTINUS, J. Annalium Boiorum, sive veteris Germaniae libri VII. In quibus non solum Boiariae, sive Bavariae regionum, urbium, fluminum, & Syluarum, sedetiam Germaniae veteris descriptio Chorographica populorum, religionis, legum, constitutionum & morum, ut & Heroum, Ducum & Regum veterum & recentiorum Germaniae, bellorum & rerum gestarum, migrationum & expeditionum historia adeo luculenta & fidelissima habetur, ut non tam Bavariae, quam totius Germaniae Chronicon dicimereatur. Francoforti, impensis Ludovici Regis, 1627. (24), 514, (2, blank), (40) pp. Folio. 18th-century polished calf, red label with gilt lettering, raised bands, gilt double fillet on sides, slightly rubbed. € 600 Neue Deutsche Biographie , i, p. 469. Johannes Aventinus, historian, 1477-1534. He went with his teacher Konrad Celtis to Vienna and devoted his time at the university there to further study of the humanists.
    [Show full text]
  • CONNECTING to COLLECTIONS PENNSYLVANIA a Five-Year Preservation Plan for Pennsylvania PROJECT OVERVIEW
    CONNECTING TO COLLECTIONS PENNSYLVANIA a five-year preservation plan for Pennsylvania PROJECT OVERVIEW Imagining Our Future: Preserving Pennsylvania’s Collections, published in August 2009, includes an in-depth analysis of conditions and needs at Pennsylvania’s collecting institutions, a detailed preservation plan to improve collections care throughout the state, and a five-year implementation timetable (2010-2015). The analysis concludes that many of Pennsylvania’s most important historic holdings must be considered at risk. Millions of items comprise these collections, and the financial resources available to care for them are limited and shrinking. Pennsylvania is a state vibrant with world-class art museums, libraries, historic sites. Arts and culture play a substantial role in creating business, jobs, and bringing revenue into the state and stewardship of its artifacts is too important —to the state, to the people, to the history of country—to be ignored. This call to action is a rallying cry for all future generations of Pennsylvanians. With generous support from the Institute of Museum and Library Services, and in close partnership with three leading preservation organizations, the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission (PHMC), the Pennsylvania Federation of Museums and Historical Organizations (PFMHO), and LYRASIS, the Conservation Center for Arts & Historic Artifacts organized and led the assessment and planning process. The project was capably guided by a Task Force with representatives from the Office of (PA) Commonwealth Libraries, the Western Pennsylvania Museum Council, the Pennsylvania Caucus of the Mid- Atlantic Regional Archives Conference, Pennsylvania State University, the Philadelphia Area Consortium of Special Collections Libraries, the University of Pittsburgh, and Carnegie Mellon University.
    [Show full text]
  • Shtetl by Marie Schumacher‐Brunhes
    Shtetl by Marie Schumacher‐Brunhes Serving as a site of memory of eastern European Judaism since its systematic extermination by the Nazi regime, the shtetl existed for centuries as a socio‐economic phenomenon and a socio‐cultural construct, out of which a literary and cultural topos grew in the second half of the 19th century. The complexity of this term, which emerged in multi‐ethnic Poland in the second half of the 17th century, lies in the difficulty in differentiating between mental perception and reality. These cities and town with populations predominantly consisting of Yiddish‐speaking Jews were never Jewish municipalities. Autonomous self‐administration by means of the so‐called "kahal" and membership of a dense Jewish network which over time even extended overseas should not be confused with political autonomy. However, in their daily lives the shtetl Jews had this double experience of living in an essentially Jewish world on the one hand, and of the relative acceptance of this situation by the surrounding population on the other hand. In this way, these provisioning islands, which were characterized by a high degree of interethnic contact, were mythologized as a bastion of Judaism – of the so‐called "yidishkeyt" – in the context of their increasing disintegration. TABLE OF CONTENTS 1. Shtetl 2. The Urban Phenomenon 3. Emergence: The Shtetl as the Result of an Alliance between the Jews and the Polish Nobility 4. The Shtetl in the 19th Century: Survival of an Outdated Model 5. Typical Features and Characteristics of Shtetl Culture 6. The Great Transformation after the First World War 7.
    [Show full text]
  • Journal of Ukrainian Studies
    JOURNAL OF UKRAINIAN STUDIES Summer-Winter 1992 CONTRIBUTORS: GUEST EDITORS: Zenon E. Kohut Dushan Bednarsky laroslav Isaievych Zenon E. Kohut Mikhail Dmitriev Frank E. Sysyn Ihor SevCenko Antoni Mironowicz David A. Frick IpHHa BopoHHyK Shmuel Ettinger Frank E. Sysyn Serhii Plokhy Natalia Pylypiuk Peter Rolland Dushan Bednarsky Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2016 https://archive.org/details/journalofukraini1712cana JOURNAL OF UKRAINIAN STUDIES Volume 17, Numbers 1-2 Summer-Winter 1992 SPECIAL ISSUE EARLY MODERN UKRAINE GUEST EDITORS: CONTRIBUTORS: Dushan Bednarsky Zenon E. Kohut Zenon E. Kohut laroslav Isaievych Erank E. Sysyn Mikhail Dmitriev Ihor Sevcenko Antoni Mironowicz David A. Frick IpHHa BopoHuyK Shmuel Ettinger Frank E. Sysyn Serhii Plokhy Natalia Pylypiuk Peter Rolland Dushan Bednarsky EDITOR Zenon E. Kohut Editorial Board Marusia K. Petryshyn Danylo Husar Struk Frances A. Swyripa Frank E. Sysyn Maxim Tarnawsky The Journal of Ukrainian Studies is published semiannually in the summer and winter by the Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies, University of Alberta. Annual subscription rates are $16.50 ($1.05 GST inch) for individuals and $21.50 ($1.40 GST incl.) for libraries and institutions in Canada. Outside of Canada annual subscription rates are $15.00 for individuals and $20.00 for libraries and institutions. Subscribers outside of Canada should pay in US funds. Cheques and money orders are payable to the Journal of Ukrainian Studies. Please do not send cash. The Journal publishes articles on Ukrainian and Ukrainian-Canadian studies. It also publishes discussions, book reviews, and journalistic articles of a controversial or problem-oriented nature. Ideally, those wishing to submit articles should first send a letter of inquiry, with a brief abstract of the article to the editor at CIUS, 352 Athabasca Hall, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, T6K 2E8.
    [Show full text]
  • Textbook on HUUC 2018.Pdf
    MINISTRY OF HEALTH CARE OF UKRAINE Kharkiv National Medical University HISTORY OF UKRAINE AND UKRAINIAN CULTURE the textbook for international students by V. Alkov Kharkiv KhNMU 2018 UDC [94:008](477)=111(075.8) A56 Approved by the Academic Council of KhNMU Protocol № 5 of 17.05.2018 Reviewers: T. V. Arzumanova, PhD, associate professor of Kharkiv National University of Construction and Architecture P. V. Yeremieiev, PhD, associate professor of V. N. Karazin Kharkiv National University Alkov V. A56 History of Ukraine and Ukrainian Culture : the textbook for international students. – Kharkiv : KhNMU, 2018. – 146 p. The textbook is intended for the first-year English Medium students of higher educational institutions and a wide range of readers to get substantively acquainted with the complex and centuries-old history and culture of Ukraine. The main attention is drawn to the formation of students’ understanding of historical and cultural processes and regularities inherent for Ukraine in different historical periods. For a better understanding of that, the textbook contains maps and illustrations, as well as original creative questions and tasks aimed at thinking development. UDC [94:008](477)=111(075.8) © Kharkiv National Medical University, 2018 © Alkov V. A., 2018 Contents I Exordium. Ukrainian Lands in Ancient Times 1. General issues 5 2. Primitive society in the lands of modern Ukraine. Greek colonies 7 3. East Slavic Tribes 15 II Princely Era (9th century – 1340-s of 14th century) 1. Kievan Rus as an early feudal state 19 2. Disintegration of Kievan Rus and Galicia-Volhynia Principality 23 3. Development of culture during the Princely Era 26 III Ukrainian Lands under the Power of Poland and Lithuania 1.
    [Show full text]
  • TEKA Komisji Architektury, Urbanistyki I Studiów Krajobrazowych XV-3 2019
    POLSKA AKADEMIA NAUK ODDZIAŁ W LUBLINIE POLISH ACADEMY OF SCIENCES BRANCH IN LUBLIN TEKA ISSN 1895-3980 KOMISJI COMMISSION ARCHITEKTURY, OF ARCHITECTURE, TEKA URBANISTYKI URBAN PLANNING I STUDIÓW AND LANDSCAPE KRAJOBRAZOWYCH STUDIES KOMISJI ARCHITEKTURY, URBANISTYKI KRAJOBRAZOWYCH I STUDIÓW ARCHITEKTURY, KOMISJI XV/3 VOLUME XV/3 TEKA KOMISJI ARCHITEKTURY, URBANISTYKI I STUDIÓW KRAJOBRAZOWYCH COMMISSION O ARCHITECTURE, URBAN PLANNING AND LANDSCAPE STUDIES POLISH ACADEMY OF SCIENCES BRANCH IN LUBLIN TEKA COMMISSION OF ARCHITECTURE, URBAN PLANNING AND LANDSCAPE STUDIES Volume XV/3 Lublin 2019 POLSKA AKADEMIA NAUK ODDZIAŁ W LUBLINIE TEKA KOMISJI ARCHITEKTURY, URBANISTYKI I STUDIÓW KRAJOBRAZOWYCH Tom XV/3 Lublin 2019 Redaktor naczelny prof. dr hab. inż. arch. Elżbieta Przesmycka, Politechnika Wrocławska Rada Naukowa prof. dr hab. arch. Mykola Bevz (Politechnika Lwowska, Ukraina) Rolando-Arturo Cubillos-González (Catholic University of Colombia, Kolumbia) prof. dr hab. Jan Gliński, czł. rzecz. PAN Charles Gonzales (Director of Planning Cataño Ward, Puerto Rico) arch. dipl. ing. (FH) Thomas Kauertz (Hildesheim, Niemcy) dr hab. inż. arch. Jacek Kościuk (Politechnika Wrocławska, Polska) dr. eng. arch. Bo Larsson (Lund, Szwecja) prof. dr hab. inż. arch. Krzysztof Pawłowski (Politechnika Lubelska, Polska) dr Larysa Polischuk (Ivanofrankowsk, Ukraina) prof. dr hab. inż. arch. Elżbieta Przesmycka (Politechnika Wrocławska, Polska) prof. nadzw. dr hab. inż. Krystyna Pudelska (Uniwersytet Przyrodniczy w Lublinie, Polska) prof. dr hab. inż. arch. Petro Rychkov (Rivne University of Technology, Ukraina) prof. Svietlana Smolenska (Charków, Ukraina) Redakcja naukowa tomu XV/1−4 prof. dr hab. inż. arch. Elżbieta Przesmycka, Politechnika Wrocławska Recenzenci prof. nadzw. dr hab. inż. arch. Andrzej Białkiewicz (Politechnika Krakowska, Polska) prof. dr hab. Mariusz Dąbrowski (Politechnika Lubelska, Polska) dr hab.
    [Show full text]
  • Professor OM Kowalewski—Mongolian Studies
    CORE Metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk Provided by Acta Orientalia Vilnensia Professor O.M. Kowalewski—Mongolian studies scholar, traveller and enlightener: His biographical landmarks Ramil M. Valeev Kazan (Volga Region) Federal University Irina V. Kulganek Institute of Oriental Manuscripts of Russian Academy of Science Jerzy Tulisow University of Warsaw Abstract. In this article, materials devoted to the basic stages of the life and activity of a graduate of Vilna University (1821), Professor Osip Mikhailovich Kowalewski (1801–1878), are presented. He held the first chair of Mongolian literature in Russia and Europe and served as dean and rector of Kazan University. Prof Kowalewski made scientific trips to Siberia, Buryatia, Mongolia and China (1828–1833); collected unique books, manuscripts, and ethnographic materials of the people of Central Asia; and became the author of classical works concerning Buddhism and the history, languages, literature, religions, folklore, and ethnography of the Mongolian people. A graduate of Vilna (Vilnius) University, Osip Mikhailovich Kovalevskiy (Осип Михайлович Ковалевский, 1801–1878) (henceforth the Polish rendering of his surname ‘Kowalewski’ is used) is one of the founders of Mongolian research in Russia and Europe, an outstanding scholar with a wide range of research, and a corresponding member of the Russian Academy of Science. The name of this Russian and Polish scholar stands alongside other outstanding Russian orientalists: Christian Fren (Христиан Данилович Френ, 1782–1851), Aleksandr Kazem-Bek (Александр Касимович Казем-Бек 1802–1870), Ilya Berezin (Илья Николаевич Березин, 1818–1896), Vasiliy Bartold (Василий Владимирович Бартольд, 1869– 1930), Boris Vladimirtsov (Борис Яковлевич Владимирцов, 1884–1931), and others.
    [Show full text]
  • Reading Between the Lines: Mining Jewish History Through Extraction of Polish Archive Data
    READING BETWEEN THE LINES: MINING JEWISH HISTORY THROUGH EXTRACTION OF POLISH ARCHIVE DATA Judy Golan Kfar Vradim, Israel Keywords: • Polish Jewish genealogical research marriages 19th century • Opatów • Działoszyce • Polish archive record extraction • Council of Four Lands • Jewish merchant trade routes • Hasidic influence • Landau Rabbinical Clan Abstract What began as a study to explain the perceived proliferation of “other” towns outside the town of Opatów during the review of 19th century Jewish marriage record extracts from that town’s archive, evolved into an exploration of how these “other” towns became a “spouse pool” for marriage-seeking Jews from Opatów. The process of town identification became a pivotal exercise in the analytical process. Evaluating locations outside the archival town meant going beyond mere town name extraction; it meant pinpointing the precise location on a map. Accurate assessment of town location is a critical underpinning of genealogical research without which inroads are stymied. This paper highlights issues and prescribes methodology logic for resolving them. By benchmarking statistics from record extracts during the same time frame from two Polish archive towns, relevance is determined. Techniques used in business analyses are applied to genealogical research, enabling illumination of similarities and anomalies. Applying such methodology is a way of “reading between the lines” of archive extracts, and allows for isolating salient aspects of any archive data. After validating the evidence of “other town” statistics in town archive marriage records, the marriage registrations are divided into four segments in terms of each couple’s towns of residency. Comparison in this way enables isolating disparities that are evident in the segment comprised by non-Town brides who married non-Town grooms.
    [Show full text]
  • William Penn's Legacy
    William Penn’s Legacy A TrAdiTion of diversiTy AnnuAl reporT 2010–2011 Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission Pennsylvania Heritage Society® A Tradition of Diversity COURTESY HISTORICAL SOCIETY OF PENNSYLVANIA ounded in 1913 as the Pennsylvania Historical On October 25, 2010, Kim Sajet, president and CEO of the Historical fCommission and reorganized in 1945 as the Society of Pennsylvania (HSP), and Philadelphia Mayor Michael A. Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission Nutter unveiled a state historical marker honoring the organization, (PHMC), the commonwealth’s official history agency founded in 1824. HSP, located at 1300 Locust St. in Philadelphia documents, preserves and interprets the Keystone since 1884, is among the nation’s oldest historical institutions. State’s diverse history and heritage. Recognizing the PHMC manages a statewide system of programs enormous diversity of citizens and communities—and supporting the preservation of Pennsylvania’s unique their precious heritage—PHMC employs a wide range and diverse historical and cultural character. Governed of programs to protect and share their stories. To by a board of appointed commissioners, the agency capture and chronicle this historic legacy, PHMC employs 217 individuals through commonwealth installs state historical markers; publishes relevant service and an equal number by nonprofit groups educational and interpretive material both in print and supporting PHMC and its initiatives. In addition, on the Web; designates historic properties—including volunteers contribute
    [Show full text]
  • Occupational Structure in the Polish Territories at the Turn of the 20Th (1895-1900) Century
    Working Papers No. 9/2015 (157) PIOTR KORYŚ MACIEJ TYMIŃSKI Occupational structure in the Polish territories at the turn of the 20th (1895-1900) century Warsaw 2015 Occupational structure in the Polish territories at the turn of the 20th (1895-1900) century PIOTR KORYŚ MACIEJ TYMIŃSKI Faculty of Economic Sciences Faculty of Economic Sciences University of Warsaw University of Warsaw e-mail: [email protected] e-mail: [email protected] Abstract Authors present the occupational structure of Polish lands at the turn of 20th century on the basis of censuses carried out in Germany (1895), Russia (1897) and Austria (1900). Our research provides corrections to the errors of the censuses, to a considerable extent. As a result, we present an occupational structure that allows a more complete the picture of the economic situation in the Polish territories at the end of the 19th century. The conducted research has created an opportunity to partially verify the assumption, which is common in Polish economical historiography, that a technological turning point and an industrial revolution occurred in Polish lands already in the 1870s and 1880s. Revised census data demonstrated that the extent of industrialization in Polish lands was still very limited in 1900. Keywords: economic history, Polish lands, occupational structure, industrialization, backwardness JEL: N33, J22, J43, J44 Acknowledgements Financial support of the Polish National Science Centre through grant no. 2012/07/B/HS4/00451 is gratefully acknowledged. Working Papers contain preliminary research results. Please consider this when citing the paper. Please contact the authors to give comments or to obtain revised version.
    [Show full text]
  • THE REID COLLECTION Presented by Miss Margaret Reid
    1 THE REID COLLECTION Presented by Miss Margaret Reid (DW)Acc. No. Item 67.149.1 Catalogue of Keuffel & Esser Co. Manufacturers & Importers of drawing materials and surveying instruments N.Y.: 1903 67.149.2 Dayton V-Belt Drives—Catalog No. 280; The Dayton Rubber Mfg. Co., Dayton, Ohio—copyright 1944 67.149.3 Motor-Cylinder Lubrication pamphlet by Lieutenant G.S. Bryan, U.S. Navy, member compliments of the Texas Co.; reprinted from Journal of American Society of Naval Engineers, Vol. XXVIII, No. I, Feb., 1915 67.149.4a-b Lubrication, Sept., 1932 Vol. 18, No. 9—2 copies—published by the Texas Co.; feature Gas Engine Lubrication 67.149.5 Medart V-Belt Drives—Catalog No. 56-V—The Medart Co., St. Louis, MO, Bulletin MV4310 67.149.6 Complete Guide for selecting or designing V-Belt Drives; The Gates Rubber Co., Denver, Colo., Copyright 1940 67.149.7 Aircraft Engine Parts by Ex-cell-o; Ex-cell-o Aircraft & Tool Corp., Detroit 67.149.8 Diesel Power; Busch-Sulzer Bros.—Diesel Engine Co., St. Louis; June 1930, Vol. 8, No. 6 67.149.9 Papers for presentation at National Meeting Oil & Gas Power Division—American Society of Mechanical Engineers, Atlantic City, NJ, Aug. 23 to 26, 1933; reprinted from Sept. 1933, Diesel Power 67.149.10 Combustion—Chambers Injection Pumps & Spray Valves for Solid Injection Oil Engines by J.E. Wild, Vice President; Robert Bosch Magneto Co., Inc., Long Island City, NY 67.149.11 Basic Principles of the Diesel Engine; Diesel Publications, Inc., NY 67.149.12 Pamphlet—Mechanical Laboratory, St.
    [Show full text]